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Twain's Brand Judith Yaross Lee

Twain's Brand By Judith Yaross Lee

Twain's Brand by Judith Yaross Lee


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Summary

Traces four hallmarks of Mark Twain's humour that are especially significant today. Twain's Brand highlights the modern relationship among humour, commerce, and culture that were first exploited by Mark Twain.

Twain's Brand Summary

Twain's Brand: Humor in Contemporary American Culture by Judith Yaross Lee

Samuel L. Clemens lost the 1882 lawsuit declaring his exclusive right to use Mark Twain as a commercial trademark, but he succeeded in the marketplace, where synergy among his comic journalism, live performances, authorship, and entrepreneurship made Mark Twain the premier national and international brand of American humor in his day. And so it remains in ours, because Mark Twain's humor not only expressed views of self and society well ahead of its time, but also anticipated ways in which humor and culture coalesce in today's postindustrial information economy--the global trade in media, performances, and other forms of intellectual property that began after the Civil War.

In Twain's Brand: Humor in Contemporary American Culture, Judith Yaross Lee traces four hallmarks of Twain's humor that are especially significant today. Mark Twain's invention of a stage persona comically conflated with his biographical self lives on in contemporary performances by Garrison Keillor, Margaret Cho, Jerry Seinfeld, and Jon Stewart. The postcolonial critique of Britain that underlies America's nationalist tall tale tradition not only self-destructs in A Connecticut Yankee in King Arthur's Court but also drives the critique of American Exceptionalism in Philip Roth's literary satires. The semi-literate writing that gives Adventures of Huckleberry Finn its vernacular vision--wrapping cultural critique in ostensibly innocent transgressions and misunderstandings--has a counterpart in the apparently untutored drawing style and social critique seen in The Simpsons, Lynda Barry's comics, and The Boondocks. And the humor business of recent decades depends on the same brand-name promotion, cross-media synergy, and copyright practices that Clemens pioneered and fought for a century ago. Twain's Brand highlights the modern relationship among humor, commerce, and culture that were first exploited by Mark Twain.

About Judith Yaross Lee

Judith Yaross Lee is a professor and director of honors tutorials in the School of Communication Studies at Ohio University. She is the author of Defining 'New Yorker' Humor and Garrison Keillor: A Voice of America, both available from University Press of Mississippi.

Additional information

NLS9781628461763
9781628461763
1628461764
Twain's Brand: Humor in Contemporary American Culture by Judith Yaross Lee
New
Paperback
University Press of Mississippi
2014-09-30
226
N/A
Book picture is for illustrative purposes only, actual binding, cover or edition may vary.
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